학술논문

Retrospective Analysis of the Outcomes of Genetic Testing in Patients Suspected to Have Hereditary Hearing Loss or Deafness.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Audiology; Mar2024, Vol. 33 Issue 1, p233-241, 9p
Subject
Retrospective studies
Developmental disabilities
Hearing disorders
Children
Genetics of deafness
Cochlear implants
Sequence analysis
Genetic disorders
Health outcome assessment
Genetic testing
Acquisition of data
Fisher exact test
Hearing aids
Sensorineural hearing loss
Conductive hearing loss
Medical records
Chi-squared test
Descriptive statistics
Genomes
Decision making in clinical medicine
Language
ISSN
10590889
Abstract
Purpose: Uncorrected hearing loss can result in detrimental sequelae. Research addressing clinical presentation and genetic testing would inform clinical decision making. Method: A retrospective chart review of 96 patients aged 1 month to 46 years (median age = 6 years) diagnosed with hearing loss or deafness and who underwent genetic testing at University of Rochester Medical Center from 2011 to 2021. Chi-square and Fisher's exact tests examined the relationship between a diagnostic positive genetic test result and various characteristics of hearing loss, including congenital (n = 52), noncongenital (n = 34), prelingual (n = 53), postlingual (n = 33), progressive (n = 13), not progressive (n = 47), bilateral (n = 67), unilateral (n = 26), sensorineural (n = 68), conductive (n = 14), mixed (n = 5), syndromic (n = 10), and nonsyndromic (n = 87) hearing loss. We also examined the number of patients with presence of developmental disabilities (n = 35), having a first-degree relative with hearing loss (n = 19), having hearing aids or cochlear implants (n = 45), and having a multisystem presentation prior to diagnosis (n = 45). Results: Patients with sensorineural hearing loss (44.1%) had significantly more diagnostic positive results than those with mixed (0%) or conductive hearing loss (21.4%), p = .004. However, significantly fewer patients with disabilities (19.4%) had diagnostic positive tests than those without disabilities (43.3%), p < .05. More patients with a multisystem presentation were also found to have syndromic causes of hearing loss (23.3%) than patients who did not have a multisystem presentation, p < .05. Conclusions: Our study suggests a significant association between sensorineural type of hearing loss and a diagnostic positive genetic test result, while the presence of disabilities was significantly associated with a nondiagnostic genetic test result. Knowledge of these findings is critical for understanding the cause of the hearing loss, identifying other associated symptoms, and determining risk to family members. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]